ABSTRACT

This edited collection examines the development of Atlantic World architecture after 1492. In particular, the chapters explore the landscapes of extraction as material networks that brought people, space, and labor together in harvesting raw materials, cultivating agriculture for export-level profits, and circulating raw materials and commodities in Europe, Africa, and the Americas from 1500 to 1850.

This book argues that histories of extraction remain incomplete without careful attention to the social, physical, and mental nexus that is architecture, just as architecture’s development in the last 500 years cannot be adequately comprehended without attention to empire, extraction, colonialism, and the rise of what Immanuel Wallerstein has called the world system. This world system was possible because of built environments that enabled resource extraction, transport of raw materials, circulation of commodities, and enactment of power relations in the struggle between capital and labor. Separated into three sections: Harvesting the Environment, Cultivating Profit, and Circulating Commodities: Networks and Infrastructures, this volume covers a wide range of geographies, from England to South America, from Africa to South Carolina. The book aims to decenter Eurocentric approaches to architectural history to expose the global circulation of ideas, things, commodities, and people that constituted the architecture of extraction in the Atlantic World. In focusing on extraction, we aim to recover histories of labor exploitation and racialized oppression of interest to the global community.

The book will be of interest to researchers and students of architectural history, geography, urban and labor history, literary studies, historic preservation, and colonial studies.

chapter |11 pages

Introduction

Building for Atlantic Extraction

part I|75 pages

Harvesting the Environment

chapter 2|15 pages

Purchasing a Poisoned City

Indigenous Andeans and Urban Space in Sixteenth-Century Huancavelica

chapter 4|15 pages

The Ice House

Industry and Ritual in the Nineteenth-Century Frozen Water Trade

chapter 5|14 pages

Contesting the Colonial Illu

Sealing and Social Change in Kalaallit Architecture, 1750–1860

part II|65 pages

Cultivating Profit

chapter 6|15 pages

From Ireland to Barbados

Architecture of Extraction in British Colonies

chapter 7|17 pages

Whiteness Among People of Color at Atlantic World Extraction Sites

A Comparative Study of the Indigenous Diamond Hill and Black Melrose Plantations

chapter 8|17 pages

Absentee Architecture

Remote Building Across the British Atlantic, c. 1800

part III|77 pages

Circulating Commodities: Networks and Infrastructures

chapter 10|13 pages

The World's Greatest Depot

West India Docks, Warehouses and Flexibility

chapter 11|14 pages

Choice Spirits or the Alloy of Slavery

Samuel Blodget's First Bank of the United States

chapter 12|17 pages

Castle Brew

Dreams Realized and Dreams Devastated

chapter 14|15 pages

From Caravans to Railroads

Trails, Architecture, and Urban Networks in Rio Pardo's Eighteenth-and Nineteenth-Century Landscapes of Extraction 1